St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 20, Number 35, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 March 1895 — Page 3

Spring Medicine

Is so important that you should be sure | to get THE BEST. Hood's Sarsapa- | rilla lias proven its unequaled merit by its thousands of remarkable cures, and the fact that it has a larger sale than any other sarsaparilla or blood puri- • fier shows the great confidence the।; people have in it. In fact, it is the : Spring Medicine. It cures all blood : diseases, builds up the nerves, and 1 gives such strength to the whole system that, as one lady puis it, “It seemed to < make me anew.” If you decide to take Hood's Sarsa i parilia for your Spring Medicine, do not buy any substitute. Be sure to get

HOOD’S Sarsaparilla

Tit for Tat. Henry Mackenzie. the author of ‘•The Man of Feeling,” was a lawyer by profession. During a visit to the Highlands of Scotland for grouse shooting, ' he made the acquaintance of a general who also was of the company, One day after dinner, there was some talk at table about poisons ratsbane and laurel especially. Quoth the General to । Mackenzie: "We say in England that ratsbane will not kill a lawyer." “In ' deed,” replied the man of law, "that is odd, for in Scotland wo say some gen erals are in no danger from laurel.” According to Withof, an area of a quarter of an inch contains 293 hairs on the head, thirty-nine on the chin, ; twenty-three on the forearm, nineteen on the back of the Itami.

WOMEN’S FACES TV —like flowers, fade

and wither with time; j the bloom of the rose is only kuowu to the healthy woman s cheeks. The pervious strain caused by £ the ailments and 1 pains peculiar to the ' sex. and the labor ami worry of rearing a family, can often

r ijK' w v wlfc^Ov

be traced by the lines in the woman s face. Dull eyes, the sallow or wrinkled face and those “feelings of weakness” have their rise in the derangements and irregularities peculiar to women. Ilie functional de- ' rangements, painful disorders, and chronic weaknesses of women, can be cured with 1 Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, hot the young girl just entering womanhood, for the mother and those about to become mothers, and later in “the change of life, ” the “Prescription ” is just what they need ; it aids nature in preparing the system for the change. It’s a medicine prescribed for thirty years, in the diseases of women, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Insti- ; tute.at Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce s Favoiite Prescription will cure the chronic intlamma- . tion of the lining membranes which cause ■uch exhausting drains upon the system. It cures nervous prostration, sleeplessness, faintness, nervous debility and all disorders ' arising from derangement of the female i organs and functions. Mrs. Jennie Williams, of Mohani. Lane Co..

feV x jy* Mrs. Williams.

Pregon. writes; "I was sick for over three /ears with blind dizzy spells, palpitation of the heart, pain in the back and head, and »t times would have iuch a weak tired feeling when I first got tip in the morning, and at times nervous Chills. The physicians difjiered as to what my disease was. but none of them did me any food. As soon as I' commenced taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre•criDtion, I began to get better; could sleep

well nights, and that bad. nervous feeling and the pain in my back soon left me. I can walk several miles without getting tired. I took in all three [ bottles of ‘ Prescription ’ and two of' Discovery. ” j Ty j .JllUlXXv KNOWLEDGE brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly Adapting the world’s best products to the’needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most Hcceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millionsand met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and tl bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well in formed, you will not *ccept any substitute if offered. I

I “I was all broken down in health, so weak and nervous I was hardly able to be up. I had severe pains in my side and headache. I would often have to stop when going up stairs on account of palpitation of the heart. 1 had no appetite and a distressed feeling in my stomach. 1 resolved to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. 1 took two bottles and have not had a spell of sick headache for four months, feel well, work all day, and eat heartily. My friends remark how well lam looking. 1 think all nervous, run-down people ought to take it, especially nursing mothers.” Mus. s. Ashworth, Eaton, O.

Famed T!u>ir Chcene. Strikes, unfortunately, have become no un.umnon occurrence in recent years; but in the old days they were rare indeed. Nevertheless, the rec- I ords of our old towns once in a while ■ give glimpses of disagre ■nmtits between employers ami employ.! which might properly pass under that title. But old-fashioned strikes ami modern । ones did not have very much in comI mon, either in cause or manner of tollduet, if one noted in the chronicles of Old Newbury was a fair sample. This occurred in the workshop of a certain Mr. Gordon, whose business i was the forging of ironwork for- hips, j He employed a number »f workmen. I but not more than could, .after the j fashion of the time, dine all together at their employer's table. Mr. Gordon was of an economical, not to say par I simonious, disposition, and the food provided was not always .ati-faetmy. 'Cheese was then considered an hulls pensable item of the noonday meal, ami cheese he particularly g: tlc M Une day. however, a line ehee e was placed upon the table after the removal of the meat, ami he took up a knife t<> cut it. But as he looked he ;eased; looked again; turned it over; patted once more; ami finally, laying down the knife, he exclaimed; ■ "This is a good che-se. a pretty | cheese, too good to spoil! " Ami rising j from his chair abruptly, he called Illis men away to their w<ul x . That afternoon a large tnehor was to be forged. The lire was blazing fiercely and the iron white hot. "That is a good heat!” Gordon < ried. exult ingly. “A good heat." responded the men. "A grand heat!" reiterated the mas | ter. i "A grand heat!" the men assented . cheerfully. “Then why don't you striker" ex- । claimed Gordon. "It is a good heat'.'" asked the foreman. hesitating, with an air of imm cent doubt. •'Yes, yes. strike, strike. I tell Von!" 'ordered Gordon, impatiently "Strike, men. strike!" “Don't you think." w as the delib rate ai.d gentle reply, w hile not an arm was lifted, “don't you think it is too good a heat to spoil?” The hint was effective. The < heese. ' with cider and a loaf of brown bread. ' was brought in before work was re sumed; and then, luncheon over, all hands turned to in the best of ! um >rs ami the anchor was forged with a will Hoar and Phillips. The late Judge E. Rockwood Hoar | was always an earnest opponent of : General Butler, ami because of this op ■ position. Wendell Phillips at one time I made a bitter attack upon the judge j Out of this feeling came what is. per I haps. Judge Iloin's best known remark. ' \fter Phillips' death, some one met j Judge Hoar ami asked him if he in I tended to go to the funeral. "No." an ' swered the judge, “I don’t; but 1 approve of it." Another remark ascribed to Judge Hoar in regard to Phillips' death—that, if he had joined the majority. It was for tin' first time the tml«o <1- > i<-l mol v We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for anv case of Catarrh that cannot be cured b. Hall '-. Catarrh Cure. „. , F; •’ CH EM . Y A CO.. Toledo. O. We the endersigued have kn .wu F J ch,-noy for the last 15 years, and believe him peiu-ctfi honorable in all business transactions and rnanHaHyaNe to carry out any obligations made bv their firm. W EST & 1 rvax. Wholesale Druggists,! oledo.O rrmi B G 'T K Mvmis, Whole-ale Druggists, loiedo. o. Hall's ( atarrh Cure is taken Internallv. acting (lliertl} upon the blood and inueou< surfaces of •“e system. To-tinmnlals -ent free. ITb-e 75c per bottle, hold by all Druggists. A red sunset foretells dry weather, because it. indicates that the air toward the west, from which rains may generally be expected, contains little moisture. Worse than Rum. । Indigestion spoils more lives than rum. i think you have “malaria” or “grip," or something worse. The trouble j is all in the digestive tract. Ripans Tal>- ! tiles bring a sort of Millennium with them. One gives relief, ami their habitual use keeps the whole system in tone. Get them of your druggist. | Removal of Ticket Office of Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. On March Ist the Chicago ticket office of । the Chicago, Milwaukee A St. Paul Ry. will j lie moved to the new Marquette Building corner Adams and Dearborn streets. The I number of the office w ill be 95 Adams street" j C. X. Souther, Ticket Agent.

AS TO ICEBERGS. Wrong; Impression# Regarding th® White Mountains of the Ocean* The only two varieties that are worthy of consideration, ow ing to their importance, are Icebergs and lee iloes, says Home and Country. The icebergs are originally simple Id form just huge hunks of ice. They are entitled to the name of “berg,” orniountain, only because they appear as such on the Hat surface of the open sea. When seen close to the mountainous, rock bound coast of Greenland, close to where they’ have been thrown off by . the glaciers, they look remarkably small and insignificant. Roughly speaking, they are about as large as a house, and । vary in size about as much as houses do. To be more accurate, few are over 150 to 200 feet in height, and icebergs reaching a height of 300 feet are exceptions. The bergs of northern seas are not so broad and long as these of the Antarctic ocean, the hitter not infrequently® covering a surface of u .i. a square® mile. The former therefore look likel huge blocks, rather than the huge fragfl ments of ice plateaus of the South* rnS polar seas. Furthermore, the southerns icebergs appear to be composed of twffl or more strata or layers of ice, auAf are far clearer than their northern sis^ tecs. on account <>f tlwir freedom fro« 6» foreign nmtter ami tin- purity of t lie !»•* which composes them. These distinct-1 ive features are not so prominent in the i obi bergs which have been partly melt- j ed and broken away by the water. The porous glacial ice of the bergs is about one seventh lighter than seawater, and only one-seventh of its bulk ‘ juts above tin- surface of the water. It , must not Is- Imagined, however, that an b eberg I<h> feet high reaches (HMi feet below the surface. This would be the I case if the berg were in exact goometri- ’ cal figure, which it is not It is one- I seventh of its bulk which appears above the surface, ami not of its height. The part under the water the remaining six seventh-- may be made up in widtli and breadth, rather than depth, as imh ed is gem-rally the ca-.-. SER\ ED IN TWO WARS THE GRIP ALMOST WON WHERE THE BULLETS FAILED. Our SvtnputhicH EntiHtcd in the 1 nfir ui i t i< s of t he V <• t < ru n. > m ikt Her II , 4, IX) There is «n old w.Jdicr in \\ <-w>ds!., ( K. i \ n . who si svi-d in th.- n..r with M> \ >o ' nt.d in the war of the rMh limn, Mr lx*vi i M<lntnriT. He p;i«-. l through l«ch ; these wars without n seriotn w<>um!. The j hardships, however, told seriously on i him. for when tic grip atta> k. d him fotsr ! years ago it mails kdh<l him. Wi n an ' look on the mtirmities of a veteran with- I out a feeling of the deep. G «o mpathv ? f His townspeople saw hhn confined to Lin i ■ nr" flint he eotdd not Ie- d -> fork nt the table, «- m-.K able “ t« •and ns he til t> lr iti -l it. h« f ’ bled and fell. They saw him the best talent to be- had but still h*- ’jf-j sered <>n for four years, md gave up finally in th -pair One day. hone serhe ; na> st rm k bv the account <>f a- >.re n hi. !i I 1 had !-Til < fleeted In tie II" -fI W- " ’ , inns' Fink IMG lb- nm-dintelv . rd. r-d a box ami . .mm.- m.d til. gtlo m He day-’ time, Ihe• F d f<>m I it- «.iv to his hug. ’ - and hi- hand* wbi h bod I - ■ n pal-.ed a- mmd a natural • .dor, and Re ] was soon e-tmlded to u-e his knife snd fork nt the table. He has nom-ml ' strength to Stu han< v- n that 1e- abie to eh -p wood. -I, .. s ■ rr .ii. i<! - h.- regular work about Ins hoim . 11. i .w »a ■ s he . .in n.it only walk to \\ . !-i, . k but can walk across the m emt uii* He is able to lift up a fifty two ...mnd weight with one hand ami -ny * he d". * not know what Dr. Williams' I’mk I’. '- have d for others, but knows that they have done a great work for him He was in t..wu last Monday, nmrt day, ami was loud m his praises of the I trn dii ine shat had giver; him so great relief. lb- ;mr. I -«d : ■ .-tb-r box and to s u i o, t ■■ w' th 1 u m m< Ims iff .s w ing to make affidavit m th.- lads The pr .p-.. < rs -I Dr. \\ idmm-' 1’ tc H> !- state thin tb. y at- not intent n.. licine but a prescription u>«,l for n.any years by an eminent pro f n. r who produced the mo-t vs. der res .Its w,th w.ak.c-s . ariog ail forms of weakness arising from a wi tery comhtieii <! the blood . r shat red i.i s. -two fr ■: ;l causes of altm -t every ill to with h th; h is heir. The pills are n!s,. a specific for the troubles pc. uhai to temab s. smh as suppression s. all forms .-t v.. kicss. etc., and in the case of men will give spo dy relief ami efTe. t pern am-nt cure in all cases : ri-mu from mental w irry. overwork, or ivit-m- of whatever nature. They are .i ti: 'y harmie-s ini car. be given to weak ami si. kly childr.-n with he greatest g H>l ml “ ho’-'t he slightest d. : r. I‘ink Pl Is are -old’by | all dealer-, or sviil be scut postpaid on receipt of price 100 cm- a box. or six box-'H for 52.50 they are lever - -M m bulk er by the 1001 by addies-n.g Dr. Williams' ' Medicine t'ompany. S hem-, t > Jy. N Y - ... n. ojIOUS. < 'hicago is the porkopolis of the world. East year the -j mkei : । hamlb <1 nv cr s.ooo.ihh> lmgs.au increase i Os IJiMpimo head over th- previous . j year, ami the porkers cost .Ss.sjxhi.imh). ' N\ hat became of all these hogs the j American Cultivator explains thus: Exclusive of the sor p el . . the hogs Used tor dressed meat and Io- j cal trade, the manufa< nir<-d product I wa- 72HJmm».(mhi pounds, of which 3tH - i ”00.000 were pork and sides, l.’lo oim I hams. 9G.000.1 Mio shoulders and Hj.h,,. <«*• lard. To produce ail this required the work of 20.000 men at the packing houses, in addition to many late and perfected labor-saving machines.” Mount Kineo, which rises precipitously seven hundred feet out of Moose- I head Lake, is wholly composed of horn- ! stone, and is the largest mass of that ■ material in the known world. Thore is no true flint in the I nited States, but hornstone so closely resembles it’that it takes an expert to tell the difference. This rock supplied arrow head to Indians hundreds ami thousands of miles away. According to an Indian tradition, the mountain is the body O s a monster moose that was slain by a giant.

Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report । AB&ouyrew pure

An Empress Copies an American. And the latest excitement tit tlie Berlin court is this: Some few weeks ago the Empress, at a reception, noticed the unusually becoming way in whi<-h Mrs. I John B. Jackson, the handsome and particularly engaging wife of the first secretary of the American embassv, wore her hair. Inquiries as to who was her hairdresser were set afoot, and a few days later the hairdresser in question was bidden to the Empress' bou doir in the new palace at Potsdam to j"do" her hair. Since then he "does" it ■ regularly. He receives live marks each ■ time ami he has lieen i-nabled to pm rTurveyor to H. EM. the Empress," on Iliis sign over the Utile shop. ■ Rut the honor is ruining him. He Etas Is en forcetl to give up all his trade, rein regular round of high-priced cusllomers, because he must hold himself Vt Teudim--, night and day. to take the ■ first train for Potsdam and atteml to ; ■the wants of the Empress-. He has be I loonie a melancholy man, broken In । 'health ami fortune. Such Is the re j (ward of royalty. Not a WoniAß Xor a Cat. ; Thore is a mining camp called "Bach- ' •elor's Rest," alvout sixty miles north of j Tucson. Ariz.. and the population now | numbers upward of nm). There Is not ; | a woman nor a cat in the camp, and , I 200 of the men have advertised for . wives in a Tucson i>apcr. They must be of good character, and understand j the duties of a household. The richest i miner offers a dowrv of Sloihmi • Briareua Had a Hundred Arma. Nrrvounnes* ban n« tunny qm-i-r symptom* I Rut wiiatevrr tbesr nmv lw. they one and nil | depart In <otiMunriK-f of the soothing, Invlg uruthig Intlcm. «■ of H-wtetU-r * sn.m.o h Hit- ■ ter*, which tone* tlir stMtetn through ths- me Jhiiu «f thorough dlgratkut mill a««imllathm. > TrvtnulotiH nenra soon Hnpiire Meadinr** by j its us* It promo'*-.* *l, , p nml app>-t|te. and foriitu * -tn . V rttaluM <n-'-:i- Mai irtn. I'OtuHputr rli. n ti*n. mid hidnry troll- i i blr» are rcUewvi by it. HF’ory mentions a single battle field ' j where .be king wa* slain ami his su< . j ecMmr erowmal. the battle of Bosworth > j Field, fought on the fourteenth of i August, 14x5. Rb Lard 111 was slain. I and the Earl of Richmond was crown . ed as H* nry VIL Pl-*.’-< cm (or < *‘ti*sitnplton ha* sav»sl me main a «io*tot'« bill s p. ||aui>v Ilopkit 1 . IGltanor.-, Md I>, V “ 'M Trials do uot make us v.* ak They | > only show u* vvh*-re w*- are weak.

iKttow nil women there is one rheumatic, neuralgu^sciatiC) and all-pain ; ^remedy, as harmless as water, and sure as taxes—lt is St. Jacobs Oil —ustd by evt rybody,—sold everywhere. ^^^WAbovc ‘A ui § S ■ Ail 8 i w Otto 4. s' r ■ / ' k 8 'c is no soap in tae world that fl stands so high in the opinion of Q "1 thoughtful women as W SANTA I claus soap! F° r washing clothes or doing housework, it can tbe J 5 equalled. Trv it. Sold evervwhere. Made onlv bv fl 4^ K' Fai’bank Company, - Chicago. “Thoughtless Folks Have the Hardest Work, but Quick Witted ’ U People use S A P P L IO ..—.......— | Weak Mothers | S and all women who are nursing babies, derive almost incon- w 0 ceivable benefits from the nourishing properties of A I Scott's Emulsion I ▼ 0 0 This is the most nourishing food known to science. It en- A f riches the mother's milk and gives her strength. It also 6 0 makes babies fat and gives more nourishment to growing $ ▼ children than all the rest of the food they eat. 0 t Scott s Emulsion has been prescribed by physicians for ▼ twenty years for Rickets, Marasmus, Wasting Diseases of Children, ▼ ▼ Coughs, Colds, Weak Lungs, Emaciation and Consumption. ▼ ▼ Semifor pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. V L Scott & Bowne, N. Y. AH Druggists. 50 cents and SI. Y <©> O -S’

On the English Plan. Japanese railroads are organized upon the English plan, w ith first, sec- j ond, nnd third class compartments. From the Land of No. I Hard. Fargo, N. D., furnishes another in- ! stance of the merits of No to bac, in the I person of Frank Winters, who writes the Sterling Remedy Co., of Chicago, to say that himself and a friend, to whom he gave a box of No-to-bae, were completely cured of the tobacco habit. He says the druggists there are selling large quantities of No to bar. The eustachian tube begins at the back of the mouth, with an oriti awhich gradually diminishes in size as Il approaches the ear. The existence of this tube justifies the impressl in that a man cun hear better with his mouth ojien. RR R CUBES AND PREVENTS Colds Coughs. Sore Throat. Influenza. Bronchitis. Pneumonia. Swelling ot the Joints. Lumbago. Inflammations. RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA. Frostbites, Chilblains, Toothache, Headache, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. Cl RES TRE WORS. PAINS in fioni one to I twenty minutes. NOTONE HOI R uftei r>aUIng this Ktvertleement need anv one st FEER I XX 11 H I AIN. A halt to 1. teaspoonful in halt atumbbrof water will in a tew minute* cure Cramps. I Spasms, sour Stomach. Heartburn. Neivvm* n-". sleeples~ne" Sick Headache. l>i;.rrl.<ra. Pv*entery Colic. Flatulency, and all internal pa ns 1 :.*re 1* not a remedial scent in the v erld that * . : ' te-.r »n<l Acne 4 a. other ms.an. -* I.; . sb I - Hi. lever* a; I I" It XI ■ W V X's Fll l-. »< c.. k■ a- Itadw <v » Re-tdy Hellrf. t iffy cent* per Im»Ul*-. noLI by nil Urii'-Kists. UAIVW XV X t 0.. M W VO ;K Ely's Cream Qt ICKI Y < I Itrs . COLDiNHEADr^I I Trlrr 50 < riif. | - ^^^fl • ■ < jSBB Kl Tl' R- - S* w ftTT*D st. N Y. " w| (lENSION^.:^ "Successfully Prosecutes Claims. FrinclpiU >.xA;” l n»r f ki. PenaloD Bur»-fku. 3yrs io last war, AUngcUixa»» oily aiuceb nmif on n HAIR MATTRESS'. I ■ If flfl *•» f n .j* find »«ii din «t t< .»» 3 I ' niutd r m ’l;" t > pav. h Kltkt ■ ■■ ■ Ma:i ,h in. Frank »rwr,i;’.

BEST POLISH IN THE WORLB. < t j b»! I DO NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stain the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odorless, and Durable. Each package contains six ounces; when moistened will make several boxes of Paste Polish. HAS AN ANNUAL SALE OF 3,000 TONS. WALTER BAKER & CO* The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS ANO CHOCOLATtS Continent, here receive^ HIGHEST AWARDS frorn the treat IM Industrial and Food 1 EXPOSITIONS ® !®I a EW and AlilOlica. i mA Unl»¥e the Dutch Vioceea, no Alt*- ■ Hee or other Y hrmicoli or Dyea are u»*d tn any of their preparation* Their delicious 3REAKFAST COCOA Is absolutely pure and aoiubla, and costs len» than one c^nt a ci^a. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER We irmjJd not have expended HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS d<‘HC paiianiriny, for which ue ir >de no e^tja charge, had there not been merit in It Galvan tng c cr:s, its in eoeiinj thf rei*t r- <t perishable (sn t n * t etal, elect, Mill the • n »t mdesir-irt ble (even when very thinj metals, nn? and a. .r. in, If c were no» peat iu galvanising no one would par •> re for galvanized barM wire or shefl »n h •an un|ja .an red cost* If we were making painted windmills •< day, xve should fanush aa ©Ft, for Sls Ti »• *. g - nca far o- * * .■ ru; . - M j WE HIILD FOR THE vGF*. WF Mol LD HOT ILI TOI' A POOR, nilll.ll toll* FL 'OH ONE 11 AOK Os SI TtL fit! HM/Hl REFOKE KEIM. H T lOGEIHKR. If lot WOVM) PH I S UOI HLK PKh F. iOtt IT. We UHf vie test wr know and knowing that pa ntrd thin sheets arg pr.g . % w r«! ,*\s. we ha 9 nothing to do with them Thf er.cr nou* cost cf preparing to do ga xanizing and of doing we aiirgcNv.r eters others SOSI Mil IGALV A Mill 3 MlFib A\t> P( M U <\D SHEAR Op* HAKE TIIRW rs AFIFUWiKt) WHEELS OB V AXES 9 vDE Ot GALVAMZEa JHFETS RIST 01 T FIRST ABOI SO THE RIV FFS, JOINTS. AM> EKES, a\D vKE. THEREFORE. Mil bO WOOD if FaIMED t»^E••. How any caowem can ear prices f.nnfetd rn.Us aid pnint^ri toif.'f. or met do wjj a# on- mater tai, rut, ai.t pu hed after the fait can onto bt . y,lainrd bv th' fact that peowZd s« tab-... are ant f t'r- value of oaivanueimp. ria i '* uaMarue everyth; j after ’ % o n pht., i even bolts and f ' leh -r. ze wth ‘he ir -t ituproxel [ roe esses and i* the m. st perfe« t known and attainable mat rer. lif i'.xkcss • FFAen a action of an Arro<’ttor TFAeeJ fa afl r« rted nu. I’ndettd and <nisnai o f rt.^t ard > tites, tt tesaMFWW * tte* MMM anti tkrrr tontd it as I cz as that *netal,aio^ until e.e j ■> V, o> »»^. oerwe, FJvd a id, -f . so, f is fi'llodf I i. td with th4 m eu m.'il, i s he whcU IS section be* ■••wa i ar, .* i Ind . led fi-jet'll- at one pwee, l ; then xcu -* - i.e- w Ee thmr that tv strong, ea* l '■ “•” * It is —'’iT '“t• d- . and smxli c -i circ, t ifi itodo it We kr? t » 0 tons vs zinc anfl is • tn melted from one 1 year’s ei ’to another lAf uAifc which ■ f l.s ^if and covert ' J 1 i >.andi^er^ j i ^adalum.^.nwh'.n ■ it is Ji> a putin. bu> afte? ••j* fl n ihm 'll comlination 01* 0 ' u- . h lanuot ba b ^fl tKrltni and is piacfuaHy । uofp* m tible. In our pre* i nous ad we talked el j prices f wind- mills, j V/fl towers, etc. and as an -n of xx hat w® I lyfl could do in the way ol REVEsigmxg is 01.0 ! ARTJLFLE AUD PTTme II It nn\ITEI.Y Si. l/JVxl PERIOK SHAPE AT A RIDH UniSLV SMALL IF 1 Vfl FRI <F. ANTOr.MCSD THE OFF Fil OF AT ALLSTTFL TEKI SI PERIOR FEED <1 TTFR. WORTH MO A.H IRH FS 1.0. Al f!0. IN OTR M\T AD. v. • MULL OFFIKIOV SOM-THIMiOF STILL t.I.)«TAK DniDAT. Anmiotor Co.. <b;eago. DON’T BE FOOLED. \- i 1 1 a* & Y -i want 'ome RIPANS TABULEi Yourilruggist’i* xupply is exhausted He has s-omethicß “ just as good.'' ‘ Wh v do- s he say this ? He thinks you a simpleton. He has a right to his opinion. But to express it So plainly Is l.rash. Hi- opinion may lie rightHot hi- - tatenmnt Is not true Tei, turn sol Get what you ask for, W. L Douglas C IS THE BEST. FIT FOR A KING. S cordovan; ENOil A ENAMELLED CALF. 5 3.5 p FINECALFiKANGASOa ^3.SO POLICE,3 SOLES, jSoSZ.WORKINGMeMk !>I7SBOYS'SCHM3i!SI -LAJOIESc ,roSp ei 7S 3 “=' EE srS° NM K ' SENO FOR CATALOGUE A s - □ OUGLAS* ERO CKTCN. J-LA9S. Over Ono Million People wear the W. L. Douglas S 3 & $4 Shoes AU our shoes are equally satisfactory Thev give the best value for the money. They equal custom shoes in style nnd fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. Tiie prices are uniform,.—stemped on sole. From Si to $3 saved over other makes. . li your dealer cannot supply you we can. Raphael, Angelo, Rubens, ‘i aiv-"" The TINF-NE REVERSIBLE' are the Best an 1 Mo«t Eo n. mi. al Co la.-s and Cutis wen;; ther are med •or fin-- cloth both sides finished al.ke. and, being rsver ible. on- <*< -liar is equal to two of o;y o-ber kind. Tf.es.-JU wtll woarwli and look >ccli. Aboiof isa Coi l's or Five l airs of Cuts for Tw-ntv-nveCents. A 8 .tuple < I.ar and Pair of C I de by mail for SW Cent- Name style and size. Address KEVEItSIBI.E CHI.I AH i OMPAXY, j D fRSHKHII sr. MEW rent ?7 SRS» ST "osns. CUTLER’S Socket Inhaler Imp r^a’.t to Fingersf fC Cures I a Grippe JHr t arrh.BronchitU,<*ol4 in and t’ongh. Handv as a knife. Ihl > , ... . INHALEB ie approved by t hysicians and Mediea J Bv Dniggistf for fl (h ; by mail for fl.lo. Mier, be Ki »r. • H. SAUTH (<►.. Proprietors, No. 410 Michigan Street, Buffalo. New Yorir* Ki3DEm«BT!UEB£SR;.!S; — iestown, HaasMrs. iVinilnw's Boorawe Sthup tor Childrs-s t ".mg: e :t na the minis, rea . ---s rißammati a. ailays i am. c irea wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. < • N. V. X,,. 1 .—<>3 IVI’EN WRITITVO TO AIM EItTISKKH *’ please pay you buw the nilvertisoiueaM in this paper. CURLS AiL EK FAILS- Ei Best C-ough Syrup. Ta;-.vS L-m.hL Use in hre.e. Scid br vtrugj!'t? afa